That Infamous Portland State University Commencement Speech By The Impossibly Verminous Bill Clinton

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There's a smattering of applause when he says that in 50 years there will be no majority race in the US -- of course this means Whites will be less than 50% of the population. And no doubt -- he spoke in Portland, after all -- a majority of those applauding were white.

I wonder if any of those applauding have ever visited another country where Whites are not the majority and observed the living standard there. With the exception of a few Asian countries, it's abysmal. Do they think that's some kind of accident?

The Bolsheviks'-within and their overriding objective of the racial replacement/genocide of the Western Whites' must be achieved at all costs; the incidental accompanying financial collapse is an added bonus to these timeless Nation-Wreckers/subversives:

There have been surprisingly few comprehensive studies of immigration’s fiscal impact. The most extensive and authoritative analysis is still the National Research Council’s study The New Americans: Economic, Demographic and Fiscal Effects of Immigration, published in 1997.

The NRC analyzed fiscal impact of immigrant and native-born households in the state of California. (Using households rather than individuals as the basic unit of analysis insures that the benefits received by U.S.-born children of immigrants are included as a cost of immigration.)

The NRC found that the average immigrant household received $3,700 more in federal benefits than they paid in federal taxes—i.e., they generated a deficit of $3,700 per year. (The NRC also found serious fiscal impact and the state and local level, but I’m leaving that aside for now).

That was 15 years ago. When I updated the NRC figures to reflect subsequent spending and revenue growth, I found the deficit is now about $17,000 per immigrant household. There are about 13 million such households in the U.S. Well, when you do the math—13 million times $17,000—you get a federal “immigration deficit” of $220 billion.

That is the fiscal deficit attributable to immigration. It equals about 17% of the entire federal deficit.

That is a big chunk. It’s roughly equal the annual interest now paid on the national debt.

It’s sobering to realize that 15 years ago the entire federal deficit was less than one-half of 1% of GDP.